Instant Jungle, Zero Passport
Our tropical plants offer bold foliage, rich color, and effortless style. Perfect for bright indoor and outdoor spaces, these lush plants create an instant tropical atmosphere with minimal effort.
Craft Your Oasis
Trees & Shrubs
Flowering
Vines & Climbers
Foliage & Ferns
Indoor Houseplants
Tropical and Exotic FAQs
Can I grow these tropicals year-round in our area's growing zone? (Zone 6A)
Most of our tropicals (palms, bananas, hibiscus, Mandevilla, Alocasias, Colocasias, gingers) cannot survive winters outdoors in Zone 6A. They should be treated as summer annuals or seasonal container plants and brought indoors before frost. Only a few ferns and hardy shrubs tolerate cool temps.
How can I protect shrubs and plants that are hardy enough to remain outside?
Container-grown plants (palms, bougainvillea, Mandevilla, Gardenia) can survive if wrapped or mulched but will do better indoors. Ground-planted tropicals like hibiscus or oleander may survive brief cold snaps if heavily mulched or planted in a sheltered south-facing microclimate.
How do I overwinter tropicals in Zone 6A?
Move all frost-sensitive plants indoors or to a greenhouse before the first frost. Reduce watering, but do not let soil dry completely. Palms, bananas, and Mandevilla can survive winter in a bright, cool indoor space, often losing some foliage that will regrow in spring.
When should I move tropicals outdoors for summer?
Wait until nighttime temps are consistently above 55–60°F (usually late May in Zone 6A). Gradually acclimate plants to sun exposure over 1–2 weeks to prevent leaf burn.
How much sun do these tropicals need outdoors?
Full sun to partial sun: Bougainvillea, Mandevilla, Hibiscus, Allamanda, Gardenia.
Partial to filtered sun: Alocasias, Colocasias, ferns, Cordyline, Croton.
Shade-tolerant accents: Asparagus Ferns, Dracaenas, some Cordylines, and tropical groundcover-style plants.
How often should I fertilize summer-grown tropicals?
Container-grown tropicals: every 2–4 weeks with a balanced fertilizer (higher phosphorus for blooming plants).
Outdoor-planted (summer only): lightly feed every 4–6 weeks.
Stop fertilizing when plants are moved indoors for winter.
Which of these tropicals are best for attracting pollinators?
Hibiscus, Bougainvillea, Mandevilla, Passiflora, Thunbergia all attract butterflies and hummingbirds.
Night-blooming jasmine and Cestrum nocturnum attract night pollinators like moths.
